Dolphins Stop Bills: The Five Biggest Plays

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The Miami Dolphins scored a signature victory when they stopped the Buffalo Bills, 21-19, at Hard Rock Stadium on Sunday.
We rank the five biggest, most important, plays of the game:
1. The fourth-down stop
Ironically, the final play of the Dolphins' goal-line stand in the fourth quarter was the one where the defense did the least. After key plays by Elandon Roberts and Xavien Howard on the first three downs, it was a bad Josh Allen misfire — when he failed to set his feet properly, leading to a bad underthrow — that kept the fourth-and-goal pass from getting to Isaiah McKenzie, who appeared to have a step on Nik Needham in the corner of the end zone.
2. The final play of the game
What stands out about this play is the hustle shown by Melvin Ingram, who almost sacked Josh Allen before turning around and chasing McKenzie from behind. It was Ingram who brought McKenzie down in bounds, which resulted in the clock running out before the Bills could set up for a potential game-winning field goal attempt. Had Ingram not tackled McKenzie, the Bills likely would have been able to try a 58- or 59-yard field goal. No gimme for sure, but Ingram didn't even give them that chance.
3. Matt Milano's dropped INT
Tua Tagovailoa had another really good performance, including a third consecutive game with a passer rating over 100, but he and the Dolphins were lucky to avoid disaster on one ill-advised pass after Buffalo had taken a 17-14. Linebacker Matt Milano sniffed out Tua's intention to throw to Tyreek Hill on a quick slant on third-and-2 and stepped in front of Hill looking for a second pick-six in as many games. But Milano dropped the pass and the Dolphins punted instead of finding themselves looking at a 24-14 deficit.
4. Jevon Holland's sack/strip
Buffalo got off to a quick start in this game with a touchdown on the opening drive and a stop on the Dolphins' first possession. And then the Dolphins got a big momentum-changing takeaway, just like it did in the opener against New England. Jevon Holland made the play not so much with disguise but simply by beating left tackle Dion Dawkins one-on-one before hitting Josh Allen from behind and forcing a fumble that Ingram recovered. Chase Edmonds scored his first of two touchdowns three plays later, and it was game on.
5. Tua's 45-yard TD pass to Waddle
With Buffalo have the ball seemingly the entire second half, the Dolphins managed only 103 yards on offense, but it was enough to put together the game-winning touchdown drive. And that's when Tua delivers his clutch throw of the game with a beautiful deep throw — yes, he can throw the deep ball — to Jaylen Waddle to convert a third-and-22 situation from the Miami 48 with the Dolphins trailing 17-14. That play set up the game-winning touchdown and was big time all around.

Alain Poupart is the publisher/editor of Miami Dolphins On SI and host of the All Dolphins Podcast. Alain has covered the Miami Dolphins on a full-time basis since 1989 for various publications and media outlets, including Dolphin Digest, The Associated Press and the Dolphins team website. In addition to being a credentialed member of the Miami Dolphins press corps, Alain has covered three Super Bowls (for NFL.com, Football News and the Montreal Gazette), the annual NFL draft, the Senior Bowl, and the NFL Scouting Combine. During his almost 40 years in journalism, which began at the now-defunct Miami News, Alain has covered practically every sport at one time or another, from tennis to golf, baseball, basketball and everything in between. The career also included time as a copy editor, including work on several books, such as "Still Perfect," an inside look at the Miami Dolphins' 1972 perfect season. A native of Montreal, Canada, whose first language is French, Alain grew up a huge hockey fan but soon developed a love for all sports, including NFL football. He has lived in South Florida since the 1980s.
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